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The Business of Organized Crime: Delivery of Illicit Goods and Services

Explore the global operations of organized crime, from the distribution of drugs and weapons to the smuggling of contraband and the counterfeiting of currency and consumer goods.

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The Business of Organized Crime: Delivery of Illicit Goods and Services

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  1. 5 The Business of Organized Crime

  2. Delivery of Illicit Goods and Services • Organized crime provides a wide array of illegal goods and services to millions of customers on a daily basis. • Some organizations operate world-wide. • Organized crime also conducts its business in a legal way.

  3. Corruption • Corrupt relationships between organized criminals and public officials must occur: • At the law enforcement level. • Between the organized criminals who infiltrate businesses and the public officials who regulate these businesses.

  4. Pornography • Soft-Core • Results from restrictiveness of public policy that prohibits hard-core pornography. (Simulated sex.) • Hard-Core • Depict more specific and explicit sexual acts (and private parts of the body).

  5. Prostitution • Any sexual exchange in which the reward is neither sexual nor affection • Legal definition: (Something of monetary value) • Cash • Promiscuity • Relationship to a sexual partner • Subtlety

  6. Prostitution • Types of Prostitutes • Streetwalkers • Massage Parlor • Stag Party Girls • Hotel and Convention • Bar Girls • Escort Service

  7. Drug Trafficking • The Distribution Chain • Importers bring large quantities of cocaine or heroin into US. • Importer hires skilled smugglers to transport the drugs. • Once drug is in US, wholesaler purchases drugs from importer. • Mules or runners – transport drugs for wholesaler.

  8. Drug Trafficking • Wholesalers receive nearly pure drugs. • Drugs must be diluted (stepped on) with chemicals to increase the amount of the drug.

  9. Drug Trafficking • Drugs, Guns, and Armed Conflict • Transfer of Arms in “Gray” Market • Fraudulent documents issued by the company, may be used to disguise the actual customer. • Fraudulent documents may disguise the military nature of the goods.

  10. Drug Trafficking • Drugs, Guns, and Armed Conflict • Transfer of Arms in “Gray” Market • False declarations by the company may hide the actual identity of the supplier. • The arms transfer may be disguised as humanitarian. • Difficult to do without corrupt customs officials.

  11. Contraband Smuggling • Seeks to achieve high levels of illicit profits by avoiding taxes, tariffs, and duties on certain consumer items. • US is a primary transit country for contraband being shipped to other destinations. • US is a major source of considerable contraband. • Automobiles, alcohol, tobacco products.

  12. Counterfeiting Currency • Typically outside the portfolio of organized crime • High risk • Labor intensive • Relatively low yield profits • Half of the counterfeit money is produced in US. • Therefore; half the counterfeit money is produced outside the US!

  13. Counterfeiting Consumer Goods • Counterfeit goods are called knockoffs and is global. • Consumer goods that are desirable and easy to produce are targets of counterfeiting.

  14. Gambling • The Process • Writers - write bets • Bets taken to central office. • Layoff bank covers extraordinary high bets. • Banker is the person that supplies capital to establish the business.

  15. Loan Sharking • Provides money at a high interest rate to people who have little choice but to go to such sources in search of financial support. • Because the loan is illegal, default cannot be sought in a court of law “unclean hands doctrine”. This leads to “self-help measures” to collect the debt.

  16. Environmental Crime • Legitimate business of waste removal for organized crime. • Illegal waste disposal. • Illegal international trade in animal parts. • Unsafe shipping of Hazardous Materials.

  17. Business Racketeering • Reasons to seek Legitimacy • Organized crime groups seek profitable and safe investments. • Active participation in legitimate business enhance the integration of crime group members with members of the business community.

  18. Business Racketeering • Reasons to seek Legitimacy: • Organized crime often supplies investment capital that would otherwise not be available from other sources. • Provides money laundering opportunity.

  19. Labor Racketeering • The use of union power for personal profit. • Major activities by which organized crime realizes illicit profits: • Sweetheart contracts. • The misuse of union benefit funds. • Extortion or “strike insurance.”

  20. High-Tech Crime • Target computer networks: • Government entities • Public utilities • Industries • Businesses • Financial institutions

  21. High-Tech Crime • “Computer Crimes” (Any crime in which a computer is utilized): • Identity Theft & Subsequent Purchases • Trading in “kitty porn” • Arranging Prostitution • Communicating Conspiracies • Soliciting Financial Schemes

  22. Human Trafficking • A significant current crime problem. • Individuals are usually sold for forced into agricultural or industrial labor.

  23. Trafficking in Women and Children • Source Countries of Traffickers • Poor economic and employment prospects for women. • Well-defined and organized extant criminal organizations. • A culture that emphasizes a subordinate role for women in society (e.g. Asia, Middle East).

  24. Money Laundering • Process where criminals conceal or disguise the proceeds of their crimes or convert those proceeds into goods and services. • Money Laundering Process: • Placement stage • Layering stage • Integration stage

  25. Money Laundering • Methods: • Bulk movement strategy • Use of financial institutions • Use of nonfinancial and commercial businesses • Movement through the underground banking system • The Underground Banking System

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